Thursday, February 28, 2013

Crazy Google Stats

     In the last couple of days this site got hit with some statistical anomalies.

     1.  I got about ten spam comments. (I usually get about one per month.)  They slipped through the spam filter, which is usually very good, and made it to the comments postings.  I deleted them.  I agree that they are basically harmless.

     2.  For the last several days, I supposedly got about 5-10 times the usual site visits.  Sounds nice, but the trafffic statistics (referring sites, keywords) don't add up.   So what is producing all the fresh access?  Not a new post.  The last one is more than a week old.

     3.  For the moment, at least, Google thinks that I started this site in October 2008.  Actually, I started in October 2010.

     All the above is sober truth.  So now I'm thinking:  why these strange statistics?  It must be sinister . . .

     Hey, maybe the government has taken over Google!  Phony employment statistics, phony budget statistics, why not phony blog statistics?

     Wait!  Maybe Google has taken over the Government!  All those Congressional staffers are really Google agents, and they are making their move. . . .

     No!  I get it!  Google has been taken over by a secret operation running out of Iran! or China! . . . Both!  This is the cyberwar they've been warning us about.  It's the End of the West, As We Know It!

     Hunker down.

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     (4. And, I still can't seem to post comments on my own site from my computer.)

     Not complaining, just letting you know.

Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Boys Adrift

A book review.

     Leonard Sax has written a book titled, Boys Adrift: The Five Factors Driving The Growing Epidemic Of Unmotivated Boys and Underachieving Young Men. (New York: Basic Books, 2007.)

     Dr. Sax (M.D., Ph. D., University of Pennsylvania, 1986) has been for many years a Family-Practice physician, and is interested in the well-being of children in their years of formal education, particularly the elementary and high-school years.  He has written at least two other books, Why Gender Matters (2005), and Girls On The Edge (2010), neither of which I have read -- yet.

     His Wikipedia entry notes that his views are "controversial."  Yes, I suppose they are:  anyone who challenges the Establishment status quo as thoroughly as he does, with facts, bold concerns, and an effective and engaging writing style would, indeed, be "controversial."

     I am going to tell you what his "five factors" are -- not intending them as a spoiler, but as a lure to get you to read this book.  Here are the five factors that he identifies as working against the healthy development of American boys:

     1.  Changes at school.  Particularly, the innovation of the last thirty years or so of expecting boys to learn to read (and sit still) at the age of five.

     2.  Video games.  Games that glorify violence and antagonistic behavior, of course; but also other games that substitute a fantasy world for the real one.

     3.  Medications for ADHD.  Dr. Sax has persuasive evidence that several popular medications prescribed for young boys (they are much more likely than girls to be diagnosed as having ADHD) damage brain function -- a damage that only appears years later in young adulthood.

     4.  Endocrine Disruptors.  Dangerous chemicals and residues that are widespread in the environment in developed countries and are known to produce atrophies in male organs and interfere with, or preclude, sexual function.

     5.  The Revenge of the Forsaken Gods.  I will not give away Dr. Sax's very interesting comments, but simply note that for those of us who suspect that there might be a religious dimension involved, he suggests that there is.  It is interesting to compare his ideas with those of others, both religious and secular, who are trying to address the modern "masculinity problem."

     To add to "controversy," Dr. Sax speaks well of the idea of segregating children into all-boys and all-girls educational environments, and I have to say that he makes an interesting case.   I think that this, as much as anything, raised the hackles of the educational establishment.

     He ends the book with some suggestions for how parents can deal with these "five factors."  I would say that he provides no easy, or complete, answers.  Consider this book as a doctor's diagnosis of a problem, and not a plan for social action.

      But if you are an educator, a social-worker, a socially-concerned individual, or a parent who is interested in the well-being and healthy growth and development of your child, I think this book would be well worth your time.

     I am grateful to a friend, who is the principal of a small inner-city elementary school, for lending me this book when I saw it sitting on his desk.  Thanks, Tim.

*

    Please note that Dr. Sax's focus in this book is particularly for boys.  If you are interested in problems specific to young girls, he has recently written a book entitled Girls On The Edge: The Four Factors Driving The New Crisis For Girls.

     Wikipedia says:

     ' On his web site, Sax says that he wrote Boys Adrift and Girls on the Edge because he is concerned about "a growing proportion of girls who are anxious, depressed, and tired; girls who can tell you a great deal about what they do but not so much about who they are. Likewise, we find a growing proportion of boys who are disengaged not only from school but from the real world. Those boys are comfortable in the virtual world, where they play their online video games, and/or surf the net for photographs of girls." '

     Dr. Sax has a website.

Sunday, February 3, 2013

Old Believers: Their Very Own Story

     Here is a fascinating story of some Russian "Old Believers."  I knew that some communities of Old Believers had long ago established colonies in Russian Alaska. But this is a more recent story, published by the Smithsonian on line:

     For forty years, this Russian family was cut off from human contact.

     A real life survivalist story.  Enjoy.